Chess World Cup 2017

The Chess World Cup 2017 is a 128-player single-elimination chess tournament originally to be held in Tbilisi, Georgia, from 1 to 25 September 2017. At the 2016 FIDE General Assembly, permission was granted to move the event to Batumi, with the final in Tbilisi.[1]

Bidding process

At the 85th FIDE Congress held during the 41st Chess Olympiad, FIDE received bids to host the World Cup 2017 and 2018 Olympiad from the national federations of Georgia and South Africa.[2] South Africa proposed Sun City and Durban as venues, while Georgia proposed Tbilisi and Batumi respectively.[3] Although Garry Kasparov expressed support for the South African bid during his FIDE presidential campaign,[4] Georgia's bid won, receiving 93 votes to South Africa's 58.[5]

Format

Matches consists of two games (except for the final, which consisted of four). Players have 90 minutes for the first 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game with an addition of 30 seconds per move from the start of the game. If a match is tied after the regular games, tie breaks will be played the next day. The format for the tie breaks is as follows:

Prize money

Round Prize[6] Total
Round 1 64 × US $6,000 US $384,000
Round 2 32 × US $10,000 US $320,000
Round 3 16 × US $16,000 US $256,000
Round 4 8 × US $25,000 US $200,000
Round 5 4 × US $35,000 US $140,000
Round 6 2 × US $50,000 US $100,000
Runner-up US $80,000 US $80,000
Winner US $120,000 US $120,000
Total US $1,600,000

According to the regulations, all players have to pay their own expenses for travel.[7]

Qualifiers

The qualified players will be seeded by their FIDE ratings of August 2017. Eighteen players will qualify by rating. All players are grandmasters unless indicated otherwise.

  1.  Anish Giri (NED), 2784 (WC)
  2.  Sergey Karjakin (RUS), 2774 (WC)
  3.  Peter Svidler (RUS), 2759 (WC)
  4.  Pavel Eljanov (UKR), 2751 (WC)
  5.  David Navara (CZE), 2735 (E16)
  6.  Radoslaw Wojtaszek (POL), 2722 (E16)
  7.  Nikita Vitiugov (RUS), 2721 (E16)
  8.  Le Quang Liem (VIE), 2718 (AS16)
  9.  Francisco Vallejo Pons (ESP), 2700 (E16)
  10.  Wei Yi (CHN), 2694 (AS16)
  11.  Laurent Fressinet (FRA), 2692 (E16)
  12.  Ernesto Inarkiev (RUS), 2686 (E16)
  13.  Ivan Cheparinov (BUL), 2685 (E16)
  14.  Evgeniy Najer (RUS), 2681 (E16)
  15.  Kacper Piorun (POL), 2681 (E16)
  16.  Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu (GER), 2669 (E16)
  17.  Aleksey Dreev (RUS), 2662 (E16)
  18.  Baadur Jobava (GEO), 2661 (E16)
  19.  Jeffery Xiong (USA), 2660 (J16)
  20.  Sergei Zhigalko (BLR), 2647 (E16)
  21.  S.P. Sethuraman (IND), 2647 (AS16)
  22.  Igor Kovalenko (LAT), 2644 (E16)
  23.  Daniil Dubov (RUS), 2644 (E16)
  24.  Hou Yifan (CHN), 2635 (PN)
  25.  Robert Hovhannisyan (ARM), 2632 (E16)
  26.  Ivan Salgado Lopez (ESP), 2618 (E16)
  27.  David Anton Guijarro (ESP), 2616 (E16)
  28.  Aleksandr Lenderman (USA), 2614 (AM16)
  29.  Emilio Cordova (PER), 2602 (AM16)
  30.  Anton Kovalyov (CAN), 2602 (AM16)
  31.  Aleksey Goganov (RUS), 2600 (E16)
  32.  Diego Flores (ARG), 2592 (AM16)
  33.  Anton Demchenko (RUS), 2589 (E16)
  34.  Mikhail Antipov (RUS), 2584 (J15)
  35.  Murtas Kazhgaleyev (KAZ), 2582 (AS16)
  36.  Mladen Palac (CRO), 2577 (E16)
  37.  Aryan Tari (NOR), 2558 (E16)
  38.  Helgi Dam Ziska (FRO), 2546 (PN)
  39.  Deep Sengupta (IND), 2543 (AS16)
  40.  Kirill Stupak (BLR), 2535 (E16)

Qualification paths

  • AF: African Chess Championship 2017 (2)
  • Z2.1 (5), Z2.2 (1), Z2.3 (2), Z2.4 (2), Z2.5 (2), Z3.1 (1), Z3.2 (1), Z3.3 (2), Z3.4 (2), Z3.5 (2), Z3.6 (1), Z3.7 (1), Z4.1 (1), Z4.2 (1), Z4.3 (1), Z4.4 (1): Zonal tournaments
  • ACP: highest-placed participant of the ACP TOUR who has not qualified with the previous criteria (1)
  • PN: FIDE president nominee (5)
  • ON: Organizer nominee (4)

References

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